Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 17 Jul 1965, p. 7

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Devlin Leads By Two As Op By JIM CRERAR TORONTO (CP) -- Austral- . fa's Bruce Devlin carried a two- stroke lead into today's final round of the Canadian Open golf championship and was downright ashamed of himself. Deviin shot a one-over-par 71 Friday for a three-round total of 205 that left him two strokes ahead of Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Gene Littler and Ma- son Rudolph, Jr., all within striking distance of the $20,000) first prize in the 72-hole, $100,- 000 event. Devlin led by one stroke after Thursday's second round de- spite ailments that included varicose veins, a sore left shoul- der and a trace of throat infec- tion left over from last week's British, Open, He doubled his lead Friday despite a shaky round that in- cluded four holes over par. "Tt's the worst playing of golf) | I've done in my life," he apol- ogized afterward. "I really made some terrible shots. I a Toronto-Wings Contest Halted After Sixteen Syracuse Chiefs, disposing of a temporary roadblock thrown up by the last-place Buffalo Bi- sons, are continuing to make steady progress towards the In- ternational League's first divi- sion. "The Bisons, who haven't won in their last 12 outings, almost pulled out the first game 0 their twi-night doubleheader Friday night when their two- run rally tied the score in the top of the final inning. A lead- off homer by John Ryan, the Chiefs' infielder from Oshawa, made the score 6-5 and Syra- cuse went on to win the second game 6-2. That stretched the Chiefs' current winning streak to five games and left them a game behind the fourth-place Jack- sonville Suns, who downed To- ledo Mud Hens 8-7, The third- place Toronto Maple Leafs were only another two games away after their 10-10 marathon against Rochester Red Wings was halted by the curfew after 16 innings. Atlanta Crackers evened their series with the leading Colum- bus Jets with a 3-2 victory that narrowed the gap between them to 3% games. The Leafs and Red Wings gave up after Scoring two runs apiece in the 16th inning. They had traded single tallies in the 14th as nine. pitchers gave up a. total of 39 hits in the free- swinging contest. started off hitting like an old woman and played only three decent holes all day. "1 really don't deserve to be leading. I should be behind by six shots." Palmer made the best come- back in the third round which featured some major collapses. He was five strokes back of Devlin starting the round but put together two nines of 34 for a two-under-par 68, his best showing of the tournament. Littler was one below par at 69 along with Rudolph, who wasn't even sure he would be able to finish the round. threesome as Rudolph and shot a 72. On the sixth hole, Rudolph told Nicklaus he was suffering from a sore neck muscle which he picked up two weeks ago. He didn't think he could finish. spite muggy weather, punctu- ated in the afternoon by a 40- minute shower, he struggled through to three birdies. South African Gary Player had 'a hot round of 67 for a 209 total but said his neck pained him. He hurt it doing exercises last week and dropped out of the British Open. Nicklaus played in the same) But wearing a sweater de-| en Nears End Second - round leaders drop- ping back in the third round in- cluded Joe Campbell of Perdido Bay, Fla., with a 73 for 209 and a tie for eighth place; Dave Stockton of San Bernardino, Calif,, with a 72 for 210 and a tie for 15th place, and Jay Do- lan III of Leicester, Mass., with 73 for 211 and a tie for 17th place. George Knudson of Toronto, the best Canadian for the first itwo rounds, had a disastrous 77 lfor a 216 total. Knudson was one over par on two holes, two over jon two more and went three over on the 18th. That left Nick Weslock of /Port Credit, Ont., as the lead- ling Canadian. Weslock is also the only amateur remaining in the tournament. He had a 68, |his best round, for a 212 total. |Bob Rose of Toronto, playing |steady .golf, shot a 70 for 215 followed by Knudson and Mont- real's Al Johnston at 216, Gerry Proulx of Montreal at 220, Bill Mawhinney of Toronto at 221 and Adrien Bigras of Montreal at 224, | Bob Roseburg of Portland, |Ore., pulled out of the tourna- lment with an aggravated neck linjury after shootirig a 77 for a 1222. Normally there is no more welcome guest at a ball park than a last-place club. But right now Minnesota Twins wish Kan- sas City Athletics would go away. The American League door- mats stunned the Twins Friday night by scoring four runs with two out in the first inning on their wy to a resounding 10-2 victory, their second in a row over the league leaders. In the process, the Athletics toppled Jim from his perch as the league's leading pitcher by handing him his third defeat in 12 decisions as they reached him for five hits and two bases on balls in their first-inning assault. The Twins were still four games ahead of Cleveland In- dians, who edged Boston Red Sox 4-3 in 10 innings, with Chi- cago White Sox another half- game back after they downed Los Angeles Angels by the same score in 11, Baltimore Orioles. shaded De- troit Tigers 2-1 in another 11-in- ning tussle and New York Yan- kees hammered Washing- ton Senators 9-5. SEGUI ENDED IT A walk and four. successive Canadian Officer Wins Mudcat) Grant ' J ees homers by Fred Whit-! Last-Place Kansas City Trounces Leading Twins By THE CANADIAN PRESS | singles produced three Kansas jCity runs. After another walk, lwinning pitcher Diego Segui |singled home the fourth run to \finish off the Minnesota starter. \The usually anemic Athletics jtagged his successors for three- lrun rallies in the third and sixth jinnings. | Larry Brown's leadoff homer lin the 10th inning won it for the Indians, who tagged Boston re- lliever Dick Radatz with his lseventh defeat after the Red |Sox had overcome an early Cleveland lead gained on sixth- |field and Leon Wagner. | The White Sox, held to three jhits by George Brunet over the lfirst seven innings, came to life 68 |when he was lifted in the eighth and sent the game into extra in- jnings with a three - run rally. Floyd Robinson broke it up with a run-scoring triple in the llth to give Eddie Fisher his lith victory against three losses. Hector Lopez, the substitute who plays more than many of New York's so-called regulars, led the Yankees against Wash- ington, driving in three runs BRUCE DEVLIN is seen squatting on his golf bag for a smoke break on the 12th green Friday, during the third round of the Canadian Open Golf championship in Toronto. The Australian golf- er shot a one-over-par 71, but still kept the lead with a 205 total going into today's final round, BASEBALL LEADERS | By THE CANADIAN PRESS | National League ABR H Pet. Mays, San Fran. 290 58 98 .338) Clemente, Pitts, 323 51 108 .334| Clendenon, Pitts. 333 57 111 .333| Allen, Phila. 319 50 103 .323 Aaron, Mil. 294 60 95 .323) . Runs -- Harper, Cincinnati,| 70; Robinson, Cincinnati, 66. | Runs Batted In--Banks, Chi-| cago, and: Johnson, Ciaclanatl Hits--Clendenon, 111; Pinson,} Cincinnati, 110. | Doubles -- Williams, Chicago,) 27;. Harper and Allen, 22. | Triples -- Callison, Philadel-| phia, 11; Clemente, 10. | gell, Pittsburgh, 21. Stolen Bases--Wills, Los An- geles, 57; Brock, St. Louis, 36. Pitching -- Koufax, Los An- geles, 16-3, .842; Farrell, Hous- ton, 7-2, .778. with a sacrifice fly and a bases- loaded single. Baltimore tied Detroit 1-1 en Boog Powell's homer in the seventh inning and won it in the llth when Brooks Robinson led off with a double and scored on Bisley Grand Aggregate two wild pitches by Larry Sherry. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT Home Runs --Mays, 23,; Star- . sota, 8-2, .800; Fisher, Chi 11-3, .786. Strikeouts--Koufax, 204; Gib- son, St. Louis, 157. American League AB R_ H Pet. Yastr'mski, Bos. 203 37 69 .346 Hall, Minnesota 297 48 95 .320 Davalillo, Cleve. 326 40 103 .316 Mantilla, Boston 290 30 90 .310 Horton, Detroit 256 41 78 .305 Runs -- Versalles, Minnesota, { 61; Oliva, Minnesota,. 60. Runs Batted In -- Colavito, Cleveland, 63; Mantilla, 60. Hits -- Davalillo, 103; Oliva, 102. Doubles -- Oliva, 26; Tresh, New York, 23. Triples--Aparicio, Baltimore, and Campaneris, Kansas City, Home Runs -- Colavito, 21; Horton, 20. Stolen Bases -- Campaneris, 29; Cardenal, Los Angeles, 26. Pitching -- Pascual, Minne- YESTERDAY'S STARS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Batting -- Floyd Robinson, Chicago, tied the game 3-3 with a pinch two-run double in the eighth inning, then slammed a run-scoring triple in the 11th that gave the White Sox a 4-3 triumph over Los Angeles An- gels. Pitching--Sandy Koufax, Los Angeles, became the majors' first 16-game winner and the first to pass 200 strikeouts, al- lowing four hits and fanning nine as the Dodgers defeated Chicago Cubs 3-0. : Shooting Matches Underway Today WINONA, Ont. (CP)--More than 160 marksmen from across Ontario have entered the three- day outdoor Ontario Rifle Asso- ciation military matches near this community 20 miles south of Hamilton. Matches for individuals to de- cide what marksmen will rep- resent Ontario in the Dominion of Canada Rifle Association meet near Ottawa Aug, 1-7, get under way today. A few team matches also will be held. Most common rifle to. be used will be the Canadian Army is- sue 7,62 millimetre; The weapon is a conversion of the .303- calibre Long Branch Mark 4 Star used exclusively for many years by the army. The match will decide an un- specified number of marksmen to represent the province at the DCRA match, as well as to de- clare a provincial champion in military rifle competition. Ontario team champions will be selected from the highest) scorers in seven matches. | THE OSHAWA TIMES, Scturdey, July 17, 1963 7 *s] BAY CT DCE: SOW STARTS AT DUSK | Now... HELD OVER... OMAR SHARIF as "GENGHIS KHAN" with Stephen Boyd --- James Mason -- also -- "CODE 7 VICTIM &" Lex Barker BOTH IN COLOR ded as Adult ©9000 066868S8S8SSSOSG8 BOX OFFICE OPENS 7:45 (INCL. SUNDAYS) FRIDAY NIGHT ONLY: Come join the fun SQUARE DANCING BY PROFESSIONALS. (Many Prizes and lots of fun) ONE WEEK ONLY! JULY 19-24 LOUIS ARMSTRONG AND HIS ALL-STARS EVENINGS 8:30, NO MATINEES BOX OFFICE 11 A.M, - 9 P.M. "WAY OUT" Goys... ond the "MAKE OUT" Gals... When in Southern California visit Universal City Studios sstenteszeceentteaee se the Art of Love f eaeeensntTinnneennettninny, the liveliest Art of all | James Garner « Dick Van Dyke} EiKe SOMMER. ANgie DICKINSON} Its all a Strikeouts--McDowell, Cleve- land, 174; Lolich, Detroit, 122. | The BEACH HOUSE CLUB By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Los Angeles--Luis Rodriguez, 150%, Miami, stopped Memo} Ayon, 160, Mexico, 3. 'San Jose, Calif.--Henry Ald-| rich, 151, San Jose, outpointed) Isaac Logart, 151, New York,| IZZA telephone 728-0192 EPI'S } PRESENTS KING ST, W., OSHAWA events, covering shooting over) distances from 200 to 1,000) yards during a week of com-| petition. | Some 1,200 competitors took part in this year's events, rep-| lresenting the cream of Com-| monwealth marksmen. Pitcairn himself had only) placed 55th in 1963, his first) year at Bisley, and 52nd last | GOLD RUSH LOUNGE and DINING LOUNGE. OSHAWA'S FINEST NIGHTLY ENTERTAINMENT ° > REMEMBER WHEN ... |~ | By THE CANADIAN PRESS FIELDER BOUGHT Henry Armstrong, welter- MILWAUKEE (AP) -- Out: OSHAWA Q * weight boxing champion of |rielder Don Dillard, 28, was i. ur- the world, stopped Lew |chased Thursday from Spracuse] BOURNE LAEATRE Jenkins, lightweight title- |of the International: League by| > 723-4972 holder, 25 years ago tonight |yiiwaukee Braves. The price} NOW PLAYING --in 1940--in the sixth round |was not disclosed. The left-| TONIGHT THRU TUES. || BISLEY, England (CP) -- Now it's Fit. Lt. Robert A. Pit- cairn, G.C. The G.C. stands for Gold Cross and represents a victory for the RCAF officer in the Grand Aggregate at the Bisley Rifle Competition, the most prestige - filled competition among a host of events in the annual trophy hunt at this sharpshooters' mecca. "It was a real surprise," the 27-year-old instructor from the flying school at Portage La Prairie, Man., said in an inter-)Aggregate. view Friday night. "That's the surprising part," TEAM DRIVER DIES He is the first Canadian tojhe said. "Most people think you) TORONTO (CP) -- George win the Grand Aggregate since|have to win one or two of the/Corbin, 38-year-old bus driver, Sgt. P. J. Martinson captured|events and place well up in the|/suffered a heart attack Wednes- it in 1934, although the chal-jothers. day night shortly after deliver- lenge shield for the competition| "But fortunately, that's notjing Edmonton Eskimos of the was donated by the Dominion|true." |Western Football Conference to} of Canada Rifle Association in} His best placing was fourth|the CNE stadium for an exhibi-| 1877, 17 years after the Bisley|and his worst was 170th. But/tion football game with Toronto, competitions began. leven with that setback, his|Argonauts. Mr. Corbin died in) The Grand Aggregate is ajover-all total of points came to) St. Joseph's Hospital about 40 FRANKLYN SHEPPARD and the "A-GO-GO's!" _ EVERY SUN, NITE -- 8:30 to 11:30 P.M. of a scheduled 12-round non- |handed-hitting Dillard will re-| port to the Braves Friday. Dil-| lard had been hitting .282 at) Syracuse, with five- home runs) and 36 runs batted in. | SATURDAY NIGHT DANCE OLD TIME and MODERN Dance to RUDY title bout. Armstrong took a bad beating in the first three rounds, but weathered the storm until Jenkins could not come out of his corner for round seven. jyear. | | And this year he didn't win) a single one of the 10 competi- tions which make up the Grand STARTING SUNDAY JERRY LEWIS BIG ALL FUN SHOW "THE "YOU'RE -- compilation of scores in 10 576 out of a possible 605. | minutes after his collapse. 16TH WIN Koufax Blanks Cubs LA. Stays With Reds By MURRAY CHASS. Associated Press Sports Writer It's taken Sandy Koufax 10 years, but he's finally made it as a hitter. Koufax, one of the best pitch- ers in baseball but previously one of the worst hitters, con- tinued his surprising _ battling pace Friday night as Los An- geles Dodgers defeated Chicago Cubs 3-0 and remained just four reentage points behind the leading Cincinnati Reds in the National League race. The 29-year-old Dodger ace) rapped two key singles, setting up two runs and scoring the/ | New York Mets 85 and San Francisco Giants nipped Hous- ton Astros 2-1. Cincinnati's Sammy Ellis other. |pitched a five-hitter for his 13th The two-hit game, his fourth|victory against four defeats. of the season and second in ajOne of the Philadelphia hits row, rocketed his batting aver-\was Johnny Callison's 18th lage to .227 with 15 hits in 66)home run in the ninth inning. times at bat. Never before has Koufax collected more than seven hits in a season or batted better than .123. The victory was Koufax' 10th \straight and 16th of the season }--high in the majors -- against Clarke Wins Race, ree defeats. Well Off Record PARIS (AP)--Ron Clarke of Australia closed out his start- ling seven-week tour of United States and Europe Fri- day night by winning the 5,000- metre run in 13 minutes, 32.4 seconds on a soggy track at Charlety Stadium. Clarke le' after the first 14 laps in the race, run during a slight drizzle. The pace was ex- tremely slow in the first half of the race, and there never jearned run average He. posted his third shutout and lowered his 4 to 2.02 while completing his 15th game jin 22 starts. the |EXTENDS HIS RECORD He also extended his National League record by reaching 200 strikeouts for the fifth consec- utive year. He fanned nine, giv- jing him a major league-leading |total of 204, just 102 away from his NL record of 306. Elsewhere in the National League, Cincinnati Reds jknocked off Philadelphia Phil- The Reds scored two runs against Jim Bunning, 10-6, in the first when Dick Stuart dropped a two-out throw from Cookie Rojas. | VELTRI and his . NEW TORNADOS Toronto's Most Versatile Group RED BARN He ACLYLES Pon BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 8:00 FIRST SHOW AT DUSK Due to construction on Thorn- ton Rd, Use Stevenson Rd. and Service Rd. SOON COMIN " PLAT Abeta NEVER TOO CADDY" § 70°. vx BILTMOREDS x: 6:30 P.M. PHONE 725-5833 1:30 P.M. LAST DAY "CLEOPATRA" Star Cast. OPEN SAT. & Wade Blasgingame scattered 10 hits for Milwaukee and socked two doubles while Rico Carty drove in three runs against Pittsburgh. St. Louis erupted for six runs in the sixth inning, three on er- rors by Al Jackson and Roy Mc- Millan, Rob Gibson brought his record to'N-7 although he gave up home runs-to Charley Smith, Jesse Gonder, Johnny Lewis and Jim Hickman. Bob Shaw held Houston to two hits through seven innings, one of them Joe Morgan's home run, and three Giant relievers held the Astros hitless the rest of the way. Dick Schofield sin- seemed any possibility that hejlies 5-1, Milwaukee Bravesigied across the winnin | 1 § r ! would approach his own pend-|crushed Pittsburgh Pirates 12-2, San Francisco's ron yen Cardinals ing world record of 13:25.8. St. Louis trimmed, enth inning. sana ---- 's x \"ramous | PLAYERS THEATRES | ALAVV ri: a SUMMER. GALAXY. FINE FILMS CELEBRATING 45 YEARS OF LEADERSHIP IN ENTERTAINMEN' ON OUR STAGE °@ IN PERSON WALLY AND THE SHANDELLS SUNDAY EVENING ONLY AT 9:00 P.M. it's Fun! It's Girls! its ! hs Color !, "GET" There is a "GET" This Week" SATURDAY, JULY 17th 50¢ Members @ 75c Non-Members CASUAL DRESS: N @ Same Place. . lo Shorts or Jeans ', Same Time @ THE STAGEMEN Starring BEN SILVERTON AND THE CHUCK ALLENS Direct from the SAHARA HOTEL in LAS VEGAS ond the LONDON PALLADIUM . . . Excellent Instrumental and side splitting comedy. @ APPEARING ALL THIS WEEK @ For Hilarious Entertainment Don't miss "The STAGEMEN" NEXT WEEK LOUIE THOMSON Commencing Monday July 1th 1;30.- 3:25 - 5:25 7:25 «9:30 ® Entertainment Nightly at 9 P.M. © MATINEE (Saturdey Only) 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. ALLAN MACMILLAN, Menoger

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